Pure poison
Political expediency may deliver up harsh punishments that nobody wants
except politicians
The political debate in Malaysia appears to be trapped in menace as the
specter of Kelantan’s barbaric hudud law, which advocates 7th-century
punishments including amputation for theft and stoning to death for adultery,
among others, continues to loom over the country.
A paper by the Malaysian Islamic Development
Department, known as Jakim, that was discussed on The Malay Mail Online a few weeks ago
has further aggravated the already tense situation by stating that the highly
controversial law, if implemented at the national level, should apply to all
citizens of Malaysia regardless of religion and in spite of the fact that hudud
must never exist in the first place.
For the time being, hudud can still be avoided
as it has not even become law in Kelantan yet, let alone on the federal level.
Its recurrent appearance on the political stage, however, shows that it is
merely the symptom of an underlying disease, rather than the absurd product of
a few twisted minds that can be trivialized or even ignored.
This disease is never directly addressed by the
nation’s highest officials who insist on putting a God for whose existence
there can never be any proof at the center of their concerns instead of a
populace that, unless one adheres to solipsism, is very real and increasingly
isolated from the rest of the world due to the dangerous Islamic ideas of its
leaders.
That Malaysia might eventually – and quite soon
– collapse on a social, cultural and humanitarian level is not solely caused by
the current threat of hudud. And dodging this legal madness alone will not
prevent further disintegration in a country that is already plagued by
deplorable chasms separating ethnicities, religions and political groups.
Malaysia has arrived at a critical point in its
history and whether or not it can survive in the future will be a direct result
of the decisions made by its highest officials today.
What might happen to a Malaysia with hudud during
the next few decades is of course difficult to predict and would depend on a
myriad of factors. Yet, attempts at drawing a picture of the future as it could
develop is crucial in order to understand what is at stake for a nation that
could be the beacon of understanding and humanitarianism within Southeast Asia,
but has consistently failed to live up to this expectation.
This is a rough sketch of such a future.
The most likely development that has been in
the making for decades is perhaps the secession of Sabah and Sarawak from the
peninsular part of the country. Justified complaints that any implementation of
hudud would violate the Malaysian constitution and therefore potentially
nullify the historical agreement that bans the governments of the Bornean states
from leaving the federation have spread during the current controversy.
That secession is considered a real threat by
the elite around Prime Minister Najib Tun Razak was clearly expressed by the
updated Sedition Act, which explicitly outlaws the promotion of independence
for Sabah and Sarawak. From a humanitarian point of view, however, leaving
Malaysia and forming an independent nation would probably be the only sensible
decision for Bornean policymakers.
Independence would open the gates for a degree
of open-mindedness and social inclusiveness that the current political
mainstream and obsession with Islam in Putrajaya renders completely impossible.
Although Islamic tendencies will remain to be a problem – particularly in Sabah
– the newly founded nation would have the potential to become the freest
country in Southeast Asia and rise to be a catalyst for positive change in the
region. In particular, it would further isolate the religious dictatorship of
Brunei whose sultan seems determined to reinvent his country as a humanitarian
wasteland.
The comparatively small population of
Malaysia’s eastern states might result in a challenging economic situation for
a nascent nation. It would therefore be paramount to openly welcome immigrants
and nationalize them quickly. Particularly if hudud should ever hit Malaysia on
the federal level, an influx of ethnically non-Malay migrants from the
peninsular states can almost be guaranteed. Many of them might arrive without
any regrets at all as they would be leaving behind a homeland that has never
really wanted them in the first place.
Political
expediency may deliver up harsh punishments that nobody wants except
politicians
Ethnically Malay citizens of the western states might consider Borneo as
well; and furthermore find another safe haven in Indonesia, particularly if the
current Indonesian president Joko “Jokowi” Widodo can lead the country farther
away from its oppressive past and strengthen its economy. The virtual lack of a
language barrier paired with the option to live a moderate form of Islam that
is becoming increasingly discouraged in Malaysia or drop the religion
altogether could attract many.
No matter where exactly its individual citizens would attempt to build a
better future, huge parts of the economic and intellectual elite would leave
Malaysia. In an analogous manner, international investment would move out under
hudud because neighboring countries in the region would offer equal or even
better opportunities minus the legal barbarism. Sadly, it is probably this last
concern that will prevent hudud on the national level because money tends to
speak more directly to the hearts of the powerful in Putrajaya than human
suffering.
What would a Malaysia look like in which the numbers of ethnic
minorities, intellectuals and wealthy citizens will be seriously reduced? It
would be a country in which only the most radical elements remain, a breeding
ground for Islamism that might eventually become potent enough to topple the
current pseudo-democratic government that created it. Malaysia’s future could
turn into a partial re-enactment of the sad fate of some Middle Eastern nations
that were on a promising path in the middle of the last century, but then were
violently pushed back into darkness by religious fanatics.
Of course this is a very gloomy prognostication and perhaps a quite
extreme version of what the future might bring. Yet, certain elements of this
development can already be felt in Malaysia today.
Apart from the obvious necessity to never allow hudud or anything
related to become even a tiny section of the law, the inevitable change that
Malaysia needs goes right to the core. Islam must be dethroned as official
religion of the federation. And it must not be replaced with any other
religion.
When the Jakim paper mentioned above poses the question how “citizens of
a country that exalts Islam as religion of the state assume that it is their
human rights to not be placed under the influence of Shariah laws,” it
inadvertently exemplifies the problem. Integrity, happiness and opportunity to
live a fulfilling life are withheld from Malaysia’s citizens under the current
circumstances and therefore the very foundation of the nation is flawed.
The assumption that the state is obliged to do anything for the
institution of Islam is based on a constitution that has become the source of
racism and religious intolerance on the highest political levels. Such a
constitution – and in fact every constitution – needs to be challenged. It
needs to prove anew at any point in history that it can create the best
possible living conditions for the citizens affected by it and thereby the best
possible society.
It is not politics that needs to bend over backwards in order to please
an ancient way of oppression that has lost touch with reality. It is religious
institutions that have to show that they are not outpaced by humanitarian
progress.
Malaysia’s elite can no longer ignore the truth that Islam needs to be
challenged, needs to be reformed and in its current form will cause the country
to fall apart. If politicians care more about the wellbeing of their citizens
than their own political power, there is no other conclusion.
Malaysia has already been pushed dangerously far towards the abyss of
religious fanaticism. It is now time for those in charge to talk human rights
instead of hudud.
The
author, who has lived in Indonesia and Malaysia for the last year and a half,
will commence as a graduate student in International Studies at the Graduate
School of Asia-Pacific Studies of Waseda University in Tokyo.
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